
Published 2026-06-09 · The Scaling Firm
Most cold emails fail because they talk about the sender, not the prospect. A great cold email is short, relevant and easy to say yes to. Here's the exact structure we use to book meetings for UK B2B teams — plus a template you can adapt today and the follow-up cadence that does most of the work.
Subject lines that mention the prospect's company, a relevant trigger or a concrete outcome beat clever wordplay. Keep it under six words, lowercase often outperforms title case, and never promise something the email doesn't deliver.
Your first line should prove you've done your homework: a recent hire, a piece of news, a specific challenge in their sector. Generic openers like I hope this finds you well signal a blast and get deleted.
State the problem you solve and the outcome you create in one or two sentences. One idea per email. The goal isn't to sell — it's to earn a 15-minute conversation.
Close with a single, low-friction ask: a yes/no question or a specific time. Asking are you the right person? or open to a quick look next week? converts far better than a hard pitch.
Most replies come from emails two to four, not the first. Space three to five touches over two to three weeks, add a new angle each time, and stop gracefully. Persistence with value beats persistence with pressure.
Three to five touches over two to three weeks works for most UK B2B. Each should add a new, relevant angle rather than just bumping the thread.
For B2B corporate contacts you can rely on legitimate interest under UK GDPR and PECR, provided you offer a clear opt-out and keep records.
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